ESA Wants Canada Kept on Piracy Watch List

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
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ESA Wants Canada Kept on Piracy Watch List


The Entertainment Software Association [http://www.theesa.com/] has asked the United States Trade Representative to keep Canada on its "Priority Watch List" of countries with "inadequate responses to domestic sources of piracy."

Canada, that wretched hive of scum and villainy that lies along the northern border of the United States, has long been known as a cesspit of criminality. In added [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/81380-ESA-Says-Canada-a-Persistent-Problem-in-Fight-Against-Piracy] to a "priority watch list" of nations lacking in "effective intellectual property protection and enforcement."

In a new "Special 301 Report" filed earlier this week, the International Intellectual Property Alliance [http://www.iipa.com/], of which the ESA is a member, asked that Canada be kept on the list. The country still suffers from "a mixture of legislative deficiencies and a lack of consistent, deterrent enforcement" that have made the country a "piracy haven," it said, pointing to Canada's refusal to criminalize the circumvention of "technological protection measures" as a major contributing factor to its high levels of piracy.

"Canada merits continued placement on the Priority Watch List," the IIPA said. "Canada has taken no meaningful steps toward modernizing its copyright law to meet the global minimum standards of the WIPO Internet Treaties, which it signed more than a decade ago. Over 80 countries have joined these treaties, including the European Union and its members states, and virtually all OECD members. The government's top leaders acknowledge many of these deficiencies and announced their intention to reform the copyright law over three years ago. Yet today there is not even a reform bill pending in the Canadian Parliament."

Canada shares its position on the Priority Watch List with Argentina, Chile, Costa Rica, India, Indonesia, Mexico, the People's Republic of China, the Philippines and Russia.

"Intellectual property theft stunts our industry's innovative momentum and job growth," said ESA CEO Michael Gallagher. "Innovators, artists and consumers are all hurt when foreign markets are closed off because their governments fall short in enacting and enforcing meaningful trade protection measures that discourage large-scale piracy."

The IIPA's Special 301 Report for 2010 can be read in full here [http://www.iipa.com/rbc/2010/2010SPEC301CANADA.pdf]. (PDF format)


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DarkSaber

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Dec 22, 2007
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Where is the pic in this articles from? It looks a bit Commandoes-y to me.

OT: Yes, how DARE Canada act like an independant western nation!
 

LeonLethality

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Damn those Canadians, those horrible pieces o- oh wait... -runs away swiftly-

I always though selling pirated games/music/videos was illegal here or maybe I just misread this.
 

MasterKirov

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I suppose now would be a time to strap "Blame Canada" on. Oh wait -

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D7UKllR0Edo
 

Dublin Solo

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How interesting.

It's funny to think that AC2 will probably be the most pirated game of the year because of the DRM, and that the core development team was located in Montréal, Canada. :)
 

Premonition

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ROFLMAOCANADA. For some reason I'm stopping to care about all these piracy articles ... Especially ones like these where nothing is being done in the end except "put someone on a list" ... Effective ... not really.
 

oppp7

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Well, I guess it's Canada's fault for being too lenient on piracy. Why do people feel that piracy isn't stealing?
 

DrunkWithPower

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ESA seems like the over protective mother of a devil child. She can't admit her child is bad, the other kids push him into doing bad things.
 

Quad08

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Yes, because the current ways of fighting internet piracy have been so effective overall, adding Canada to this list of bad countries will definitely change things

/sarcasm
 

Amnestic

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Aug 22, 2008
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DarkSaber said:
Where is the pic in this articles from? It looks a bit Commandoes-y to me.
That's the Docks District of Athkatla, from Baldurs Gate 2: Shadows of Amn, known primarily for being run by the Shadow Thieves, a thieves guild.

Personally if they were going for pictures of pirate land from BG2, Brynnlaw (a pirate-run town) would be more appropriate, but also not as recognisable.
 

sheic99

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oppp7 said:
Well, I guess it's Canada's fault for being too lenient on piracy. Why do people feel that piracy isn't stealing?
Well, that's because it technically isn't. Piracy is the copying and sharing of data illegally. It actually falls under the same laws as counterfeiting products, such as designer bags and clothes, as opposed to theft.

OT: Damn you dirty Canadians with your cheap drugs and lenient copyright legislature. You're the bane of society.
 

Dublin Solo

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Amnestic said:
DarkSaber said:
Where is the pic in this articles from? It looks a bit Commandoes-y to me.
That's the Docks District of Athkatla, from Baldurs Gate 2: Shadows of Amn, known primarily for being run by the Shadow Thieves, a thieves guild.

Personally if they were going for pictures of pirate land from BG2, Brynnlaw (a pirate-run town) would be more appropriate, but also not as recognisable.
Or why not Booty Bay? Even the name reeks of pirateness...
 

oppp7

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sheic99 said:
oppp7 said:
Well, I guess it's Canada's fault for being too lenient on piracy. Why do people feel that piracy isn't stealing?
Well, that's because it technically isn't. Piracy is the copying and sharing of data illegally. It actually falls under the same laws as counterfeiting products, such as designer bags and clothes, as opposed to theft.

OT: Damn you dirty Canadians with your cheap drugs and lenient copyright legislature. You're the bane of society.
And how is that really much better? The people that made the games and such have a right to it, so people shouldn't be able to get it for free unless the developers say they can.
You also forgot counterfeitting money.
 

Andy Chalk

One Flag, One Fleet, One Cat
Nov 12, 2002
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Amnestic said:
Man, that picture is clever. Don't try to pretend otherwise.

And this matter goes far beyond videogame piracy. The US wants Canada to enact laws that are distressingly similar to the failed DMCA, covering not just videogames but all sorts of copyright. Books, music, movies, images, you name it, and that doesn't even begin to get into the questions of sovereignty that are potentially at stake here. The reason there's been no action over the past three years, as the filing notes, is that every time the government tries to overhaul the copyright act to bring it more in line with what the Americans want, it's met with major opposition from the Canadian people. Our copyright laws are imperfect, absolutely, but it's pretty clear at this point that the approach the US is demanding isn't any better.

It's also worth noting that in its 2008 report (the most recent available), the Business Software Alliance actually ranked Canada among the lowest 20 nations in the world in terms of software piracy.